A) profit margin of each concert.
B) cost of spillover effects from the concert (e.g., noise and traffic) .
C) value of concerts to society as a whole.
D) amount by which the city should subsidize the concert organizers.
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Multiple Choice
A) increased competition.
B) weakening property rights.
C) better informed market participants.
D) government intervention.
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Multiple Choice
A) there is no externality.
B) there is a positive externality.
C) there is a negative externality.
D) The answer cannot be determined from inspection of the table.
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Multiple Choice
A) the marginal consumer values this product less than the social cost of producing it.
B) every consumer values this product less than the social cost of producing it.
C) the cost to society is equal to the value to society.
D) the marginal consumer values this product more than the private cost.
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Multiple Choice
A) give sellers the incentive to account for the external effects of their actions.
B) increase demand.
C) increase the amount of the commodity exchanged in market equilibrium.
D) restrict the producers' ability to take the costs of the externality into account when deciding how much to supply.
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A) a direct regulation of an externality.
B) corrective taxes.
C) a Coase theorem solution to an externality.
D) the misuse of a subsidy.
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Multiple Choice
A) technology spillovers are too expensive to control.
B) measuring the size of spillovers from different markets is difficult.
C) spillovers often occur in industries that produce undesirable products for society.
D) positive side effects are often outweighed by negative side effects.
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Multiple Choice
A) pay your roommate at least $25 but no more than $50 to clean up after herself.
B) pay your roommate at least $51 to clean up after herself.
C) charge your roommate at least $25 to have you clean up after her.
D) charge your roommate at least $50 but no more than $100 to keep you from complaining about the mess.
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Multiple Choice
A) results in an equilibrium that does not maximize the total benefits to society.
B) causes demand to exceed supply.
C) strengthens the role of the "invisible hand" in the marketplace.
D) affects buyers but not sellers.
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Multiple Choice
A) The cost of the noise to Olivia must exceed the benefit of the music to Ty.
B) The benefit of the music to Ty must exceed the cost of the noise to Olivib.
C) The Coase Theorem guarantees that Olivia and Ty will always be able to come to an agreement that keeps Olivia from calling the police regardless of the individual benefits and costs.
D) The cost of the noise to Olivia must exceed the benefit of the music to Ty by an amount greater than the transaction costs associated with the agreement.
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Multiple Choice
A) social value = private value = private cost < social cost.
B) private cost < social cost = private value = social value.
C) social cost = private cost = private value < social value.
D) social cost = private cost = private value = social value.
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Multiple Choice
A) are effective under all conditions.
B) will usually allocate resources efficiently if private parties can bargain without cost.
C) are only efficient when there are negative externalities.
D) may not be possible because of the distribution of property rights.
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A) too much competition.
B) externalities.
C) low consumer demand.
D) scarcity.
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Multiple Choice
A) the economy cannot benefit from government intervention.
B) markets are not able to reach equilibrium.
C) a firm sells its product in a foreign market.
D) Bobbi engages in an activity that influences the well-being of Rosa and yet Bobbi neither pays nor receives payment for that influence.
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Multiple Choice
A) a corrective tax sets the price of pollution and a permit sets the quantity of pollution.
B) a corrective tax creates a more efficient outcome than a permit.
C) a corrective tax sets the quantity of pollution and a permit sets the price of pollution.
D) a permit creates a more efficient outcome than a corrective tax.
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Multiple Choice
A) assisted technology.
B) intervention policy.
C) industrial technology assistance.
D) industrial policy.
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Multiple Choice
A) flu shots provide a positive externality, and that flu shots should be subsidized.
B) if flu shots are not subsidized, then the number of people getting flu shots will be smaller than the socially optimal number.
C) the externality generated by flu shots is more like the externality generated by education than the externality generated by pollution.
D) All of the above are correct.
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True/False
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